
| Shaftesbury Theatre | |
|---|---|
| The theatre's current production is Hairspray | |
| Address | |
| City | |
| Designation | Grade II |
| Architect | Bertie Crewe |
| Owned by | The Theatre of comedy Company |
| Capacity | 1,400 seat |
| Type | West End Theatre |
| Opened | 27 December 1911 |
| Previous names | New Prince's Theatre Prince's Theatre |
| Production | Hairspray: The Musical |
| www.shaftesbury-theatre.co.uk | |
| Coordinates: 51°30′58″N 0°07′34″W / 51.516083, -0.126 | |
The Shaftesbury Theatre is a West End Theatre, located on Shaftesbury Avenue, in the London Borough of Camden.
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The theatre was designed for the brothers Walter and Frederick Melville by Bertie Crewe and opened on 26 December 1911 with a production of The Three Musketeers, as the New Prince's Theatre, becoming the Prince's Theatre in 1914. It had a capacity of 2,392 and a stage 31' 10" wide by 31' deep.
The Prince's was the last theatre to be built in Shaftesbury Avenue, and is located near New Oxford Street, perhaps explaining the many gaps between performances in its early years. It had considerable success with an 18 week season of Gilbert and Sullivan, in 1919. These became a regular attraction at the theatre, interspersed with runs of theatre productions transferred from other venues. Basil Rathbone appeared at the Prince's Theatre in May 1933 when he played Julian Beauclerc in a revival of Diplomacy.
The theatre was sold to EMI in 1962, and became the Shaftesbury Theatre the following year.
Part of the ceiling fell in on 20 July 1973, forcing the closure of the long-running musical Hair, after 1,998 performances. The theatre almost fell victim to redevelopment, but a campaign by Equity succeeded in having the theatre placed on the 'Statutory List of Buildings of Special architectural or Historic Interest', and the theatre was Grade II listed by English Heritage in March 1974.[1]
The theatre reopened with West Side Story a year later. During the redevelopment of the Royal Opera House in nearby Covent Garden in the late 1990s the theatre was booked as an alternative London venue for performances including Benjamin Britten's Paul Bunyan.
The venue is currently owned by The Theatre of Comedy Company, who have owned the venue since 1984.
In March 2006, the 1,400 seat theatre underwent a large refurbishment, with the entire stalls and dress circle being reseated, redecorated and the front of house areas refurbished. Between 1 May and 1 September 2007, it played host to a reworked revival production of Fame: the Musical to fill the summer gap, prior to the European premiere of the Tony Award-winning Broadway smash Hairspray: the Musical opened in October 2007.
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